scholarly journals Dynamical indicators of resilience from physiological time series in geriatric inpatients: Lessons learned

2021 ◽  
pp. 111341
Author(s):  
Jerrald L. Rector ◽  
Sanne M.W. Gijzel ◽  
Ingrid A. van de Leemput ◽  
Fokke B. van Meulen ◽  
Marcel G.M. Olde Rikkert ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Shadi Aljawarneh ◽  
Aurea Anguera ◽  
John William Atwood ◽  
Juan A. Lara ◽  
David Lizcano

AbstractNowadays, large amounts of data are generated in the medical domain. Various physiological signals generated from different organs can be recorded to extract interesting information about patients’ health. The analysis of physiological signals is a hard task that requires the use of specific approaches such as the Knowledge Discovery in Databases process. The application of such process in the domain of medicine has a series of implications and difficulties, especially regarding the application of data mining techniques to data, mainly time series, gathered from medical examinations of patients. The goal of this paper is to describe the lessons learned and the experience gathered by the authors applying data mining techniques to real medical patient data including time series. In this research, we carried out an exhaustive case study working on data from two medical fields: stabilometry (15 professional basketball players, 18 elite ice skaters) and electroencephalography (100 healthy patients, 100 epileptic patients). We applied a previously proposed knowledge discovery framework for classification purpose obtaining good results in terms of classification accuracy (greater than 99% in both fields). The good results obtained in our research are the groundwork for the lessons learned and recommendations made in this position paper that intends to be a guide for experts who have to face similar medical data mining projects.


2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 488-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mike Wu ◽  
Marzyeh Ghassemi ◽  
Mengling Feng ◽  
Leo A Celi ◽  
Peter Szolovits ◽  
...  

Background: The widespread adoption of electronic health records allows us to ask evidence-based questions about the need for and benefits of specific clinical interventions in critical-care settings across large populations. Objective: We investigated the prediction of vasopressor administration and weaning in the intensive care unit. Vasopressors are commonly used to control hypotension, and changes in timing and dosage can have a large impact on patient outcomes. Materials and Methods: We considered a cohort of 15 695 intensive care unit patients without orders for reduced care who were alive 30 days post-discharge. A switching-state autoregressive model (SSAM) was trained to predict the multidimensional physiological time series of patients before, during, and after vasopressor administration. The latent states from the SSAM were used as predictors of vasopressor administration and weaning. Results: The unsupervised SSAM features were able to predict patient vasopressor administration and successful patient weaning. Features derived from the SSAM achieved areas under the receiver operating curve of 0.92, 0.88, and 0.71 for predicting ungapped vasopressor administration, gapped vasopressor administration, and vasopressor weaning, respectively. We also demonstrated many cases where our model predicted weaning well in advance of a successful wean. Conclusion: Models that used SSAM features increased performance on both predictive tasks. These improvements may reflect an underlying, and ultimately predictive, latent state detectable from the physiological time series.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. e72854 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir H. Shirazi ◽  
Mohammad R. Raoufy ◽  
Haleh Ebadi ◽  
Michele De Rui ◽  
Sami Schiff ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
pp. 307-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anisoara Paraschiv-Ionescu ◽  
Kamiar Aminian

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